Me watching the world burst because they can’t just be normal humans and respect each other
It’s your own fault
What‘s to come is for all of you and all of your accomplices.
1) netanyahu and gang are over
2) america will be free again
3) america will be serving the americans first again
4) israel will go back to the people of israel which are palestinians, peaceful jews, christians and muslims and renamed to palestine
5) bitcoin will be over $250k usd
6) iran will be renamed into the „United Persian Empire“
7) USA and UAE will control the rebuilding of Palestine and the leadership of the new united persian empire
8) no more wars thanks to china‘s generosity
I have seen this story before. It always begins the same way, with the promise of revelation. Someone announces that they have finally discovered the hidden mechanism, the secret plan, the invisible hand that explains everything that feels broken, unfair, humiliating, or out of control. It feels powerful because it replaces confusion with certainty. It feels brave because it dares to name an enemy. And it feels rational because it borrows the language of analysis while quietly abandoning analysis itself.
When systems grow complex and opaque, the human mind does not tolerate ambiguity for long. It wants a face, a text, a council, a single will behind the chaos. That impulse is ancient. When Rome decayed, people blamed cabals. When empires shifted, people blamed priests, bankers, foreigners, heretics. Not because those explanations were true, but because they were simple enough to be believed while everything else was falling apart.
The mistake is not noticing patterns. The mistake is assuming that patterns require puppeteers. Power in the real world does not operate through secret parchments or century old scripts. It operates through incentives, leverage, feedback loops, and path dependence. It is messy, competitive, fragmented, and constantly unstable. Intelligence agencies do not write history. They chase it, manipulate fragments of it, and later claim authorship to preserve relevance. Corrupt men exist in every era, but exposing a corrupt man has never proven the existence of a cosmic plan.
Texts that claim to explain total domination survive for one reason only. They feel explanatory in moments of loss. They turn structural complexity into moral theater. They allow the reader to feel awake while doing nothing that actually changes the equilibrium. A forged plan is more comforting than admitting that the world is driven by distributed forces that do not care about fairness, virtue, or identity.
Minorities dominate power centers not because of secret unity, but because power concentrates where leverage compounds. Finance, media, law, technology, trade. These are multiplier domains. Any group that historically optimized for literacy, portability, networks, and abstraction will appear overrepresented once those domains become decisive. The same pattern repeats across civilizations, across cultures, across centuries. Confusing correlation with coordination is how people end up fighting ghosts while real power moves elsewhere.
States act above the law when they are strategically useful. That has never been unique to one country, one ideology, or one people. Law follows power. It has always followed power. Complaining about hypocrisy without understanding enforcement is not resistance. It is commentary.
Yes, narratives are manipulated. Yes, bots exist. Yes, information warfare is real. But believing that only one side uses it is not insight. It is naïveté dressed up as skepticism. The real censorship today is not silence. It is saturation. People are not controlled because they are lied to. They are controlled because they are exhausted.
The most dangerous sentence in that entire worldview is not about media or monopolies. It is the quiet assumption underneath it all. Everything is controlled. Because once you believe that, responsibility evaporates. If everything were truly controlled, no empire would ever collapse. No ruler would ever be surprised. No outsider would ever rise. Yet history is nothing but the repeated humiliation of systems that believed themselves final.
Cyrus did not look for hidden councils. He did not hunt conspiracies. He walked into broken systems and offered a superior order. He did not fight control head on. He rendered it irrelevant by making cooperation rational and resistance expensive. That is how real change happens. Not by exposing imaginary masters, but by becoming an unavoidable alternative.